Footnotes, endnotes or online notes?
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03-29-2014, 06:03 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-29-2014 06:14 AM by BettyO.)
Post: #5
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RE: Footnotes, endnotes or online notes?
Quote:I prefer footnotes; I'm a compulsive reference-checker and hate flipping back and forth to find the corresponding end notes. But I think publishers prefer end notes; they must be easier to format. Welcome, Scott! A very Facinating subject.... I, too prefer footnotes - but endnotes will do, too. Yes, I can tell you from experience that publishers like and prefer endnotes for that exact reason. Publishers find endnotes are easier to format. One of the first things I turn to in a book before I purchase, are the notes. To me, notes are the skeleton/spine of the book and put "meat on the bones" of it, as it were. It's like getting two books in one! I can't tell you how many times I've found other facinating things to research in notes. I love books with really good notes! A lot of times, that is what will "sell" the book to me..... I'm also disappointed in books with no index. I think historical books should have these. I remember in college, one textbook my history professor wanted us to use seemed good - until the actual book came in. It had no index and the professor therefore told us not to purchase it and went for another. Never heard of "online" notes. I hate that and think that it leaves a LOT to be desired. If we had done such a thing in college, we'd have been shot down..... Mike's Brutus has wonderful notes; as did Theodore Roscoe in his Web of Conspiracy - old and dated surely, but a classic all the same! Bill Richter's Sic Semper is a treasure trove of wonderful notes! I consider Bishop's Day Lincoln was Shot more or less a novel because he uses conversations, etc. without any documentation. There are few notes in his papers as well (stored at St Bonaventure University, NY; they are online) http://web.sbu.edu/Friedsam/archives/jim.../index.htm However, I've read some novels which have fascinating notes. "The Past is a foreign country...they do things differently there" - L. P. Hartley |
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